RON MALY HAS BEEN WATCHING THE PARADE GO BY FOR A LONG TIME. THIS IS ONE OF HIS WEBSITES.

Sunday, August 30, 2015

How To Stay Awake On Sunday Night--Courtesy Of Cubs' Jake Arrieta, Who Pitches the First No-Hitter Of His Career In 2-0 Victory Over Los Angles Dodgers

By RON MALY

Sunday Night  Baseball on ESPN turned into quite a spectacular show for Jake Arrieta of
Jake Arrieta
the Chicago Cubs. 


Arrieta pitched the first no-hitter of his career by slamming the door on the Los Angeles Dodgers, 2-0, on one of baseball's biggest stages--Dodger Stadium.  

Frequently, I watch a few innings of the Sunday night game on ESPN, then go outdoors to take a walk so I can wake up. 

Not tonight.  

I watched every inning of a game that gave Arrieta a major league-leading 17th victory. 

I stayed awake, too. 

I didn't get my walk, but what the hell? 

No-hitters don't come around that often--especially by a Cubs pitcher. 

If not many people were regarding Arrieta as a legitimate Cy Young Award candidate, they were very aware of it after the game. 

Arrieta allowed just two baserunners--one via an error by [who else?] fumble-fingered second baseman Starlin Castro, the other on a walk.  

"I thought it was a hit," Arrieta said in his televised postgame press session. "Tough play. Hernandez hit it well. Tough short hop for Castro. They scored it an error, thankfully so, and I was able to finish it off." 

Even though the Dodgers lead the National League's West Division, tonight's game marked the second in 10 days that they went without a hit.

The Cubs aren't exactly an offensive machine themselves. Their only two runs of the game came in the first inning when rookie Kris Bryant homered.

The victory gave the Cubs a none-too-impressive 2-4 record on a trip to San Francisco and Los Angeles.

Arrieta was the winning pitcher in both games. 

Hey, the guy can pitch.